The ITC-Backpack wearable mobile mapping system can digitize building interiors quickly and with high levels of detail.
Credit: University of Twente (Netherlands)
A researcher at the University of Twente in the Netherlands has developed a wearable mobile mapping system that can generate detailed three-dimensional (3D) maps of building interiors.
The ITC-Backpack features three two-dimensional (2D) LIDAR scanners to record points on walls, ceilings, and floors, and an inertial measurement unit (IMU) to measure the backpack's accelerations and angular velocities over time.
The researcher also developed a LIDAR-IMU-based simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM) algorithm that depends on planar structures in indoor environments.
While he encountered some challenges in creating a three-dimensional map from 2D data points, UT's Samer Karam said he "developed a specific loop closure technique that makes the backpack system recognize the previously visited places and corrects the drift."
From University of Twente (Netherlands)
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